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8 mistakes to avoid when implementing marketing analytics
1. Marketers embrace
analytics with the
best of intentions.
To succeed requires
connecting analytics
tools to the right data,
the right people and
the right marketing
strategy. In this article,
marketing experts
discuss common
pitfalls they have
seen make analytics
projects fail.
8 Mistakes to Avoid
When Implementing
Marketing Analytics
By Mindy Charski
2. PAGE 2
8 Mistakes to Avoid When Implementing Marketing Analytics
8 Mistakes to AvoidWhen
Implementing Marketing
Analytics
By Mindy Charski
April 10, 2013
Marketers recognize the value of using data to make smarter decisions, a trend
borne out by recent research surveys. Questions to 700 marketers showed
68 percent said they plan to increase their spending on data-related marketing
expenditures this year, according to the survey sponsored by Yesmail Interactive and
Infogroup Targeting Solutions. A 2012 study by the New York American Marketing
Association and Columbia University researchers shows a consensus, too: 91 percent of
the 253 marketers interviewed said they believe successful brands use customer data to
drive marketing decisions.
But while it’s becoming clear marketers feel the need to embrace
data-based decision making, they face a number of potential pitfalls
in implementing analytics to support their goals. Marketers must
work with new technology and build new alliances inside and outside
their organizations at a time when the velocity and complexity of
marketing programs is accelerating, says Mark Price, managing partner
at M Squared Group, a data-driven marketing consulting firm in Eden
Prairie, Minn.
At the same time, Price says, the“accepted behaviors”of marketers are
also changing.“Marketers have traditionally only had to evaluate their
programs on the broadest of measures—share of market over time,
change in customer awareness, positioning, etcetera,”Price says.“Now
they must learn a new skill set and understand that the new skill set is
what is valued the most at the senior levels of the organization.”
Price and other experts identified eight common mistakes enterprises should avoid
when instituting marketing analytics in their businesses. Watch out for these issues that
can limit your company’s return on investment:
“Marketers have traditionally
only had to evaluate their
programs on the broadest
of measures. Now they must
learn a new skill set.”
– Mark Price, M Squared Group
3. PAGE 3
8 Mistakes to Avoid When Implementing Marketing Analytics
1. Failing to integrate and analyze all available
customer data.
The marketing group can learn a lot about customers through data it collects. But
marketers will get a limited picture if they don’t incorporate information gathered
through other departments like those that handle research, e-commerce or the call
center. Consolidating a company’s data assets to get a holistic view of customers can
make marketing analytics so much more powerful, says Mike McGuirk, partner at
the marketing analytics consultancy iKnowtion, which is a business unit of TeleTech
Holdings.
“The more information we gather from all these different groups inside of a business,
the better understanding we’ll have of that customer so that we’ll be that much more
targeted with our next communication that we send to them,”he says.
Consider this example from McGuirk: A cell phone operator may think a customer is
perfectly happy with the service based on reports that show consistent use of monthly
minutes over the past six months. But what if that person recently called the contact
center to complain about multiple dropped calls? If the usage data isn’t connected
with the call center data, the firm’s marketers won’t recognize that customer is at risk of
leaving. If it is integrated, marketers could react quickly, perhaps giving the customer
extra minutes for the next month
or sending a communication
explaining how the company is
making improvements to avoid
future dropped calls.
2. Not asking
actionable
questions.
It’s understandable that some
decision makers would seek wide-
ranging insights. But it’s a mistake to
frame questions that are too broad.
“Analytics are a way to answer
business problems but many times
people start by saying,‘Tell me
everything about this,’”says Price.
Instead, he says, it’s important to
Data for a 360-Degree CustomerView
Mike McGuirk of iKnowtion describes five categories of information that,
when combined, can contribute to a 360-degree view of a customer:
• Customer profiles: Attributes like age, marital status, number of
children, and level of participation in the company’s loyalty program.
• Purchase transactions: Date of last purchase, frequency of pur-
chases over a window of time, and how much the person spends.
• Customer engagement: Interactions the customer has with the
firm through call centers or online that can reveal sentiments about
the company.
• Surveys: Feedback the customer gives describing needs or prefer-
ences, like how he or she would like to be contacted.
• Promotional history: How often the company sends offers and the
customer’s response to promotional campaigns.
4. PAGE 4
8 Mistakes to Avoid When Implementing Marketing Analytics
“focus on what is the business problem you need to solve and what information do you
need to have to be able to answer it in a way that will let you take action.”
Two well-defined and actionable questions are:“Which of my customers have stopped
buying my products in the last six months?”and“What did they used to buy?”Armed
with that knowledge, Price says,“I can use offers related to those products in the
communications I’m going to send to [lapsed customers], so by doing that I’m going to
get a higher level of response and I’m going to make more money.”
3. Only exploring quick hits.
Don’t jam the analytical pipeline with too many short-term problems that may not
have a strategic impact on the business or on marketing operations—requests that
consultant Peter Vandre refers to as“fire drills.”
Say, for instance, a senior executive wants to know how the profile of customers who
bought widget A differs from the profile of those who bought widget B. That kind of
question can be answered with the data but may be hard to act on in a way that creates
major value for the business, Vandre says.
In contrast, Vandre says a request that can have a longer-term impact is an analysis to
identify, implement, and automate 10 high-value email trigger programs based on key
customer behaviors.
“When we work with clients what we try to do is say,‘Thirty percent of our time is going
to be spent on fire drills, but the other 70 percent needs to be on things we prioritize
that are going to have a longer-term impact on the business,’and usually those things
just take longer to analyze,”says Vandre, who is vice president, digital analytics at the
CRM agency Merkle.
4. Using analytics to justify marketing
decisions rather than drive change.
Sometimes, when analytics sits within marketing groups, its function turns into making
a group shine instead of always providing objective insight, says Vandre.
“You mine the data to find the one thing that looks good with the program and ignore
the other 20 things that don’t look so good with the program,”he says.“What ends up
happening is analytics actually is detrimental in that case. Not only are you focusing
potentially on some of the wrong things, but you’re also reinforcing things the company
really shouldn’t be doing.”
5. PAGE 5
8 Mistakes to Avoid When Implementing Marketing Analytics
Marketers may celebrate the 10,000 new email registrations they attained through a
contest, Vandre explains, while ignoring that half of the registrations were from invalid
emails and only 2 percent of registrants ever opened an email sent to them.
It’s important to design marketing efforts in ways that facilitate objective analysis, he
says, and to have the discipline to not only define upfront what success looks like, but
also to adhere to that throughout the process.
5. Letting silos stifle communication between
marketers and analysts.
Vandre describes a scenario you don’t want to experience:“The marketing organization
says,‘Here’s our problem,’and the analyst doesn’t have a lot of exposure to what’s
happening day-to-day within the programs being executed there so they make
recommendations naively, not really understanding what’s possible or not possible.”
Analysts may tell marketers they should spend more on branded paid search, for
example, only to discover the team has already bought all the keywords that exist,
Vandre says. Integrating analysts into marketing departments can reduce those kinds of
glitches by making them aware of existing research projects and data sources.
6. Not applying marketing skills internally.
Marketers must build credibility and buy-in with the people who are going to help them
execute on the marketing plan, like those in the C-suite and in departments like sales,
operations, finance and IT.“You have to build support with those people to succeed or
you will fail,”Price says.
For example, marketers should work with the finance team to determine how to
evaluate the success of a marketing program before it launches.“If a common
framework for evaluation can be established, the CFO can become the voice of
validation to the CEO about marketing results,”he says.
But marketers also need to run what Price calls an“internally focused marketing
campaign.”He says it starts with determining which constituents are important to
influence in the organization, their existing beliefs about marketing, and the metrics
that will matter to them. Next, Price says, marketers should take a customized approach
— deciding how often they’re going to send individual decision makers updates about
the status of marketing programs and choosing which vehicles will work best for each
person, perhaps opting for newsletters, PowerPoint presentations or personal updates.